The Commodities Feed: Iranian Oil Flows Rise Amid Market Headwinds, Natural Gas Volatility Ahead
ING Economics 23.08.2023 10:00
The Commodities Feed: Iranian oil flows edge higher
The oil market continues to face headwinds, both on the macro front and on the back of expectations of supply increases. Meanwhile, the natural gas market could see further volatility over the coming days with a deadline for labour talks at some LNG facilities approaching.
Energy - Deadline Day for some Australian LNG talks
The rally in oil appears to have run out of steam for now. China's macro issues, along with a growing expectation that maybe the US Fed is not done with its tightening cycle have weighed on oil more recently. In addition, the broader strength in the USD will be providing some headwinds.
Fundamentally, the outlook for the market is still constructive with large deficits to persist for the remainder of the year. However, there is some noise around growing supply, specifically from Iran. Iran has quietly increased its output by around 400Mbbls/d over the last year to a little over 2.9MMbbls/d, which is the highest level since late 2018. Iran has said that it will look to increase output to around 3.4MMbbl/d by the end of summer, which would leave it close to pre-sanction levels of 3.8MMbbls/d. Given much of the focus has been on Russian flows since the war, Iran has taken advantage of this to increase oil exports. This comes against the backdrop of apparently greater willingness between the US and Iran to improve diplomacy, evident with a recent deal for a prisoner swap and the release of frozen Iranian funds.
There is also further noise around the potential restart of Iraqi oil flows via the Ceyhan export terminal in Turkey. The flows were halted back in March after a court ruled in favour of the Iraqi government, which claimed that these oil flows from the Kurdish region were happening without its consent. Iraqi and Turkish officials have been meeting this week with the hope of resuming the roughly 500Mbbls/d of crude oil that flows via this route.
API numbers released overnight show that US crude oil inventories fell by 2.4MMbbls, slightly less than the roughly 3MMbbls draw the market was expecting. Crude oil stocks at Cushing continue to decline, having fallen by 2.1MMbbls over the week. For refined products, gasoline inventories grew by 1.9MMbbls, while distillate stocks edged lower by 153Mbbls. The more widely followed EIA report will be released later today.
Natural gas markets should get more clarity around Australian LNG supply over the next 24 hours, given that end-of-day Wednesday is the deadline that workers at Woodside’s North West Shelf gave to come to a deal. As a result, we could see further volatility in natural gas prices for the remainder of the week. We should also get more clarity on how negotiations at Chevron’s Gorgon and Wheatstone are developing later this week.